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Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Boston Radio: WGBH Dropping The "W"
After nearly 70 years, WGBH is changing its name.
According to The Boston Globe, the Boston-based public broadcasting service, which has long operated both a radio and TV station, announced Monday that it is dropping the “W” and rebranding simply as “GBH.”
WGBH officials say the new name — ditching the “broadcast-centric ‘W'” — reflects their commitment to “digital-first content” of streaming, apps, podcasts, social media, educational curricula and virtual events. In a press release, the station said that more than than half of its audience impressions come through digital platforms
“As technology, media, and consumer expectations are evolving, so are we,” Tina Cassidy, the chief marketing officer at GBH, said in a statement.
The rebranding, which comes with an updated logo and production credit, also is part of the station’s effort to signal its national reach through those digital platforms, as well as production partnerships with PBS on popular TV shows like “Frontline” and “Masterpiece.”
So what exactly was wrong with the ‘W’ in the first place?
Aside from adding a few additional syllables to its name, the letter was a relic of early 20th century radio station naming customs. Back then, the government assigned a W to commercial broadcast licensees on the east side of the Mississippi River, while licensees on the west side got call letters beginning with K.
The other three call letters in WGBH’s name stood for Great Blue Hill, the site of the station’s original TV and radio transmitters in Milton, which the station’s website says will “forever” hold a “special place in WGBH history.”
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